I'm wondering how many people that say they wouldn't play a computerized game buy raffle tickets.

That's a good point, but I participated in many reverse raffles and the usual format was each number was placed into a capsule and drawn one at a time. It took over an hour with just 100 entries. Some of these lottery raffles have 250,000 entries and over 1000 different prize winners so it would be difficult and time consuming if the same method was used.

While they were ball drawings, up until last year Kentucky's midday Pick-3 and Pick-4 drawings were not a live broadcast. Last year because of cost, the KY lottery could no longer televise the evening drawings, but came up with a unique way to now stream the midday and evening ball drawings live via the Internet.

IMO, in games where an RNG choose our numbers, drawing the winners by RNG makes no difference, but in the games where we can choose our own numbers, we should be able to see the drawing process.